Affiliation:
1. Department of Applied Mechanics, Budapest University of Technology and Economics and MTA-BME Lendület Human Balancing Research Group, Budapest, Hungary
2. W. M. Keck Science Department, The Claremont Colleges, Claremont, CA 91711, USA
Abstract
Sensory uncertainties and imperfections in motor control play important roles in neural control and Bayesian approaches to neural encoding. However, it is difficult to estimate these uncertainties experimentally. Here, we show that magnitude of the uncertainties during the generation of motor control force can be measured for a virtual stick balancing task by varying the feedback delay,
τ
. It is shown that the shortest stick length that human subjects are able to balance is proportional to
τ
2
. The proportionality constant can be related to a combined effect of the sensory uncertainties and the error in the realization of the control force, based on a delayed proportional-derivative (PD) feedback model of the balancing task. The neural reaction delay of the human subjects was measured by standard reaction time tests and by visual blank-out tests. Experimental observations provide an estimate for the upper boundary of the average sensorimotor uncertainty associated either with angular position or with angular velocity. Comparison of balancing trials with 27 human subjects to the delayed PD model suggests that the average uncertainty in the control force associated purely with the angular position is at most 14% while that associated purely with the angular velocity is at most 40%. In the general case when both uncertainties are present, the calculations suggest that the allowed uncertainty in angular velocity will always be greater than that in angular position.
Funder
J. T. Oden visiting faculty fellowship, Oden Institute for Computational Engineering and Sciences, UT Austin
Higher Education Excellence Program of the Ministry of Human Capacities in the frame of Biotechnology
William R Kenan, Jr Charitable trust
Hungarian-French Bilateral Scientific and Technological Cooperation Fund
Cited by
9 articles.
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